That's because there's more than one audience you can choose to pitch your product to. Sometimes, as in these cases, cornering a niche market can be a smarter business move than just going for the broadest possible audience (I believe this is a point Jim Sterling makes frequently).weirdo8977 said:so what i get from this is that most of great art has come from "pandering" to the people and that as an artist you need to sometimes give up "artistic integrity" in order to make money. So if that's the case then did Demons Souls or Mount and Blade make enough money to spawn 3 squeals? I don't see those artists pandering to the audience yet the still make enough money to survive on.
Regardless of my personal preferences, I never actually said there was anything wrong with it. In fact, I was offering an explanation for why that sort of character gets used so much: it's marketing, not necessarily conscious racism/sexism on the part of the devs.and if making money is important then why is it so wrong to make the over used while guy character?
Hey hey hey, no need to be belittling or to insult my intelligence. It's possible that I misread your post, I didn't launch a personal attack. And I wasn't trying to be "witty" and I fail to see how my post was in any way "destructive", I was trying to raise point that's relevant to this discussion - that people tend to overvalue "artistic integrity" and "creative freedom" and assume that external influences on these things are a new phenomenon, when they're just not.Tenmar said:Please take the time to actually read the entire post. Instead of trying to be witty. Please spend more time on your reading comprehension and give the posts you read the benefit of the doubt. I at least take the time to read posts I respond to and more often than not go back and re-read it and take the time to respond properly.
But to help you out I'll just quote myself. From that very same post. I know you can be constructive instead of destructive when posting. Have a wonderful day.
All that said, I don't see how my response wasn't appropriate to your initial assertion. The fact that you later suggested market research doesn't change the fact that you also said that if you start writing what other people want you cease to be an artist and become a panderer.